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In Reply to: Re: heavier gauge applies to longer distance posted by wazoo on April 20, 2007 at 20:42:09:
Hey Wazoo,I agree, and you really do have to be careful with distance on the thin stuff.
But when you think of it, there are hundreds of ft of thin wire that make up the maggies drivers themselves!
I don't see what the big deal is to use 8ft of 12g when hundreds and hundreds of ft in the crossover or drivers is very thin anyhow.
On the bass, IME thick cables usually muck up the bass and blur the precision that maggies have.
I know the text book are stacked against me, but if you try the thin stuff, you will hear increased resolution in the bass. It will be less bloated, and some people dig this, and some are so used to the bloat, that they miss it. For me, I like the accuracy but YMMV.
Follow Ups:
I'm using some Litz wires I purchased in Germany 25 years ago. I've had to re-terminate it - the original silver pig-tails didn't hold up too well, besides I'm not keen on having 20' speaker cables when 6' cables reach. As you can see, the strands are rather fine and the cumulative gauge is well short of 'Monster' proportions. All I have to say about terminating Litz wire is that it's a real joy!
Cool wire. After 25 years it hasn't oxidized?
That's one of the beauties of Litz wire's enamelized strands. You'll also notice that the positive and negative wires all share the same jacket. In fact, they are woven around each other. The enamel that makes all of this possible also makes them a bitch to terminate. One has to use a solder pot and dip and skim and dip and... I don't have a solder pot, but I can improvise!
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